Hay v. City of Springfield & The Capital Electric Co.

64 Ill. App. 671, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1020
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 16, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 64 Ill. App. 671 (Hay v. City of Springfield & The Capital Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hay v. City of Springfield & The Capital Electric Co., 64 Ill. App. 671, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1020 (Ill. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wall

delivered the opinion op the Court.

The appellant filed his bill in chancery against the appellees alleging that he was a resident and tax payer of said city; that on the 30th October, 189-1, the city council adopted the following ordinance:

“ Whereas, the Capital Electric Company of the city of Springfield, Illinois, has submitted to the city of Springfield, Illinois, the following proposition iñ words and figures following :

“ To the City Council of the City of Springfield :

The Capital Electric Company of the city of Springfield proposes as follows:

Article 1. To furnish for the use of said city to light its streets, alleys, avenues, sidewalks, public grounds and public buildings three hundred (300) arc lights, and such additional number of arc lights as the city council may from time to time order, all of two thousand (2,000) nominal candle power, and to light the same on moonlight schedule, and on very cloudy nights, at and for the price of $113.33 (one hundred and thirteen and thirty-three one-hundredths dollars) for each arc light per annum.

Article 2. This company proposes to erect a plant capable of lighting said city with three hundred (300) arc lights of nominal two thousand (2,000) candle power, and to add two (2) fifteen hundred (1,500) sixteen (16) candle power incandescent alternating dynamos, all to be of recent manufacture and to be of first-class workmanship, and to superintend the erection and operation of said plant and to procure the necessary funds for the erection of the same.

Article 3. If the city council of the city of Springfield shall each year draw and deliver to its order, in favor of the company, on the city treasurer of the city, as soon as the annual levy and appropriation for lighting the streets of said city shall be made, and payable only out of the said street lighting fund, when collected, for a sufficient sum to pay said Capital Electric Company at the rate of one hundred and thirteen and thirty-three one-hundredths dollars for each arc light per annum ordered by the city council and furnished by said company, payable at the expiration of each and every month that the lights have been furnished., and said company agrees to apply such funds to paying the current expenses incurred in operating said plant in lighting said streets and alleys of said city, and the interest on purchase money required to erect said plant, any portion or balance remaining out of said lighting fund after paying the current expenses and interest as aforesaid shall be credited to the account of said city and shall be applied to paying the purchase price of said plant if the city elects to purchase the same. But it is understood and agreed by said company that in case the city accepts this proposition, such acceptance shall create no indebtedness against said city in favor of this company. This company expressly agrees in case the city shall elect to draw and deliver the said order or orders for the purpose aforesaid that this company will not look to the city of Springfield for the payment of said order or orders, but will look for payment only to the lighting fund, which shall have been levied and appropriated as aforesaid. And in case the city shall accept this proposition, it is expressly agreed by this company that it shall be optional with the city whether it shall draw and deliver the said order or orders to said company or not.

Article 4. The Capital Electric Company proposes to erect a suitable electric plant, and to keep full and complete account of the cost thereof, and to maintain and operate the same on an economical basis, and to keep an accurate and fair account of the cost of such operation and maintenance, and whenever the profits arising from the operation of said plant shall have paid the cost of said plant and interest" thereon, and the cost of operating and maintaining the same, the city of Springfield may, at its option and election, take the said plant; and in case the city does so elect, the Capital Electric Company will convey the said property and plant to the city of Springfield, free of incumbrance, but no obligation or liability rests on the city of Springfield to pay any sum of money except for the lighting of the city, and when the city exercises said election, this company shall be thereby released from any obligation to furnish lights as provided for herein.

Article 5. It is hereby agreed and understood by and between the city of Springfield and the Capital Electric Company, that the said company shall furnish to the said city incandescent lights for the lighting of the City Hall and engine houses without cost to said city, so long as this proposition shall be in operation; the city to furnish all renewals and police station.

Article 6. The city council by and through the proper committee, or any duly authorized agent, shall have access at any and all times to the books and records of said company.

Article 7. The officers and directors will not receive any salaries or fees in the conduct and management of said plant.

How, therefore, be it ordained by the city council of the city of Springfield, that the foregoing proposition of the said Capital Electric Company be and is hereby accepted.”

That the city was then and for a long time had been indebted in excess of the constitutional limit of five per cent upon the assessed valuation of taxable property therein; that the proposition set out in said ordinance and the acceptance thereof were merely the formation of a plan theretofore devised whereby the city might evade the constitution, and acquire an electric light plant, ■ and that the acceptance of the proposition in legal effect created an indebtedness on the part of the city to said Capital Electric Company in violation of law, and was therefore void. That in pursuance of said ordinance the said company had built the plant, and that the lights had been furnished, and that a bill for the month of June, 1895, had been paid according to said contract amounting to $2,883.33.

That before the plant was complete said company had leased the same to the firm of McCaskey & Holcomb, and that the latter had thereby agreed to furnish the 300 arc lights to the city at $60 per annum for each light whereby the said company was deriving a net profit of about $1,300 per month on the said contract. That the price fixed in said contract was exorbitant and known to be so by the council when it was accepted, and more than would have been necessary, had fair competition been invited or permitted. That said plant is being operated in pursuance of the terms of said agreement with the understanding that the excess shall in some way be enjoyed by the city, but that such agreement was unlawful, oppressive on the public, and ultra vires, the ulterior design being that the city should acquire the plant and that a fund specified in the appropriation ordinance, known as the “ street lighting fund,” amounting to $34,000 per annum, was being thus diverted to that purpose, and that if not prevented such unlawful action Avould be continued.

Prayer that the contract be set aside, that the city be required to invite competition for lighting, and to accept suitable propositions to be so obtained, for a temporary injunction and for general relief.

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Bluebook (online)
64 Ill. App. 671, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1020, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hay-v-city-of-springfield-the-capital-electric-co-illappct-1896.